ID thieves steal tax returns

Ripping off the Australian Tax Office (ATO) is a seriously profitable business.

A fraudster requires little more than a victim’s name, address, date of birth and Tax File Number (TFN) to land thousands of dollars in fraudulent claims.

According to public documents, a staggering $33 million worth of suspected fraudulent tax refunds linked to identity crime has been blocked since July this year. Many more aren’t blocked – the number of which is difficult to guess at being that the ATO won’t discuss the matter.

MULTI-VECTOR ATTACKS:

- Fraudsters steal the identity of victims to lodge fraudulent returns with the tax office.

- Australian Federal Police are understood to be only able to investigate instances of fraud against the ATO if banks supply suspect account details. This is thought to scarcely occur.

The alarm

The task facing the ATO’s team of anti-fraud investigators is hard to overstate. The $33 million in fraudulent returns blocked since tax time represented a mere 0.67 per cent of total returns processed over the same period. The ATO had withheld pending review 1.2 per cent of returns amounting to $401 million in claims which it considered “overstated” or “potentially fraudulent”.

And with the lion’s share of legitimate and fraudulent returns filed within four months, the office’s sophisticated fraud-detection systems are put on a hunt for the proverbial needle in the hay stack.

Elizabeth Camerson* and Paul Mansfield* were two unrelated Australians whose identities slipped through the cracks. Earlier this year, Camerson and Mansfield each filed two tax returns for the years 2010 and 2011, and 2009 and 2010 respectively.

Camerson received her 2010 tax return via her tax accountant, but was informed her return for that year was already claimed.

Mansfield filed for both returns directly with the ATO and received the claim for 2009 - but not 2010 – from which he expected to be paid around $500. Like Camerson, the ATO said his return was already claimed.

In both cases, fraudsters had exploited their accounts to fleece the tax office for about $6500 each.

Precisely how the accounts were hijacked is unknown to all but the scammers and potentially those within the ATO. With permission, SC Magazine supplied the office with detailed accounts from the victims of how the fraud took place with hopes of learning more about the rorts.

But a spokesman for the tight-lipped agency replied that it cannot by law discuss individual accounts, and also refused to engage in what it called “hypothetical cases”. Which doesn’t leave a lot to talk about.

However, the spokesman hinted that identity fraud was likely a major factor behind the scams.

Camerson and Mansfield received a similar response when they approached the Tax Office.

The ATO had told Camerson her return was filed through a tax accountant and paid into a Sydney CBD Westpac account. She has received no further assistance.

“I took off vigilante style to track down where this account number came from,” Camerson told SC Magazine. “I found the Westpac branch ... they said the account was not in my name, which I feared it was, and that eight ATO tax claims had been lodged into it.”

She said the ATO informed her that a $6300 return was lodged under her 2011 return using a bogus group certificate linked to a legitimate Sydney cafe.

Mansfield was told by the ATO that his 2010 return was filed through tax agents H&R Block and paid into a Commonwealth Bank account.

“I went into a branch and asked them about it,” Mansfield said. “They said I had to sign up to investigate, so I did.”

H&R Block could not be reached for comment by the time of publication. However, Mansfield told SC Magazine the company did manage to track down his record. A woman, Claire Davies, had registered as his wife last year and lodged a $6500 return using a fraudulent group certificate.

Both Camerson and Mansfield were told by the ATO to register for a new Tax File Number as their previous TFNs were now “compromised”.

While Camerson will file for her defrauded 2011 tax return, worth only around $50, Mansfield said he has been left in the dark after attempting to re-claim his 2010 claim months ago.

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